It uses a Motorola Lapdock which is a Dumb 11 inch screen, keypad and mouse. It has annoying connectors for docking the Motorola Atrix Android phone but with some custom cables and adapters I can connect my PI.

I Cut off the USB A FEMALE end and also cut a standard Micro USB cable in half. I attached 5V & GND to the micro USB end and GND, D+ and D- to the USB A Male.

This means the the 5v + GND lines from the lapdock usb goes to the micro usb connector and powers the Pi and the Data and ground lines go to the USB A Male like any USB peripheral and connect to the PI USB port to connect the keyboard and the trackpad.

This allows the Lapdock to power the PI from its battery / mains adapter and gives me an 11.6" screen , a keyboard and trackpad. It also battery powers the PI.

The screen is crystal clear and very bright. I'm really impressed

This would have been 3 weeks ago but the adapters (linked to above) took 3 weeks to arrive!

Last edited by veryevil on Wed Nov 20, 2013 12:35 pm, edited 1 time in total.

There aren't any speakers on the lap dock which is a shame so no sound.

However there is a pretty big Lithium battery in it which will run the PI for Hours so that's cool.

Good job! I've been working on the same thing this weekend and almost the same setup as you. The Atrix Lapdock does have speakers, but I haven't gotten any sound from them. The speakers are located on the sides, in the rear corners.
I've got a couple of questions, and pardon my noobness. How did you get 1366x768 resolution? I'm stuck at the default setting which is 1270x672. Also, was wondering if you got any wifi adapters to work, if so which one? I had an old NetGear wg111v2 laying aournd. The Pi recognizes it through the USB port on the Lapdock, but haven't had any luck getting wifi to work.
Keep updated, I'm interested in learning how to set mine up more efficiently!
My blog is here http://rpidock.blogspot.com/2012/05/ras ... pdock.html

Last edited by Joe_T on Mon May 28, 2012 3:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Yay, thanks for copying my idea(which I posted about a month ago) but taking the easy way out, buying a lapdock. You didn't make it, you bought it. Now I just cannot wait till my pi arrives so I can show you guys A REAL pi laptop.

hackery21 wrote:Yay, thanks for copying my idea(which I posted about a month ago) but taking the easy way out, buying a lapdock. You didn't make it, you bought it. Now I just cannot wait till my pi arrives so I can show you guys A REAL pi laptop.

People have been having the same idea since the Pi was announced, so no one copied your idea. Why not applaud the original poster for finding a quick to make solution for a complicated problem, and not be so aggressive.

The plugs inside the back of the Atrix dock look pretty tight. I'm guessing that you are using a female mini HDMI (C socket) to female mini HDMI convertor. Where did you find it? I've looked around for one but the best that I can find is this http://www.amazon.co.uk/Ex-Pro-Standard ... pd_cp_ce_0 which I'm guessing will be too tight next to the USB cable.

I posted up ebay links above to the adapters I used both from the same seller in fact although it took three weeks for them to arrive from china (it was a post issue not a seller issue). Also Task Note the connectors are MICRO! not MINI!

veryevil wrote:I dont even have an Atrix I bought this specially weeks ago!

I posted up ebay links above to the adapters I used both from the same seller in fact although it took three weeks for them to arrive from china (it was a post issue not a seller issue). Also Task Note the connectors are MICRO! not MINI!

My Pi arrived yesterday and I was in a bit of a quandary as to which monitor to hook it up to as my main desktop is attached to the only monitor with HDMI, having seen this thread I've now ordered from http://www.oyyy.co.uk/product.php/22089 ... 60-lapdock £51.97 free P&P so cheaper than Amazon. Just a matter of waiting for it to arrive, now where have I heard that before?

Just got one from OIYY<whatever>.co.uk. £51, a bargain. Now to snag some cables. I would anticipate that the Pi can be mounted inside it - somehow - but if not, it's not a deal breaker. I wonder how big the phone is? You might consider gutting one to use as a case for the Pi, remove unneeded ports and just slot it in like the phone.